LONDON, ENGLAND, January 08, 2011 (Press-News.org) House of Fraser, the premium department store now offers the new Tommy Hilfiger 2011 collection online at www.houseoffraser.co.uk.
Established in 1985, Tommy Hilfiger has successfully created preppy, luxury leisurewear along with fresh fragrances. Tommy Hilfiger clothing and accessories, including men's jeans and men's socks, women's clothing and children's hats and scarves are now all available at houseoffraser.co.uk.
The new range includes Tommy Hilfiger's Men's Holiday collection, featuring padded cotton plaid shirts in a variety of festive shades from holly green to cherry red, adding a pop of rich colour to any man's wardrobe. Relaxed chunky knits and outerwear are worked in a traditional palette of black, white and grey that features tartan and heritage houndstooth trims and linings giving these classic pieces a new twist. Favourites include the fairisle shawl collar cardigans with snowflake intarsia and heavy boiled lambswool hooded jacket with toggle fastening and cosy red lumberjack lining.
This winter Tommy Hilfiger women's Holiday collection offers an elegant 60's silhouette featuring black boucle which separates from the evening duster coat, as well as a selection of cocktail dresses in silk, lurex wool and crepe. Customers can choose from the classic smoking dress or opt for the super chic strapless little black dress, cinched at the waist with oversized satin bow.
Whether customers are looking for essential basics or quality workwear and casualwear, they can rely on the Tommy Hilfiger collection and a variety of other luxury designer labels, including Ralph Lauren and Hugo Boss, both of which are also available online at House of Fraser.
About House of Fraser
House of Fraser is a department store group with 61 enviable locations across the UK and Ireland and a fully transactional website. As one of the best known names on the high street, House of Fraser has presented customers with an unrivalled nationwide department store for more than 160 years. The company was acquired by the Highland consortium in November 2006 marking the beginning an exciting new chapter in its history. The group has annual sales in excess of GBP1.25bn and employs 6,500 House of Fraser staff and 10,000 concession staff through 5 million sq ft of selling space. HouseofFraser.co.uk launched in 2007 and currently boasts over 850 brands and 125,000 individual products.
House of Fraser Introduces New Tommy Hilfiger Collection Online
House of Fraser has announced the availability of the new Tommy Hilfiger collection online at houseoffraser.co.uk.
2011-01-08
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Salon and Spa Galleria Adds Arlington Location
2011-01-08
An old dog learns new tricks as an Arlington salon reopens its doors with a new marketing strategy for both customers and tenants. Every specialist who rents a studio at the Salon and Spa Galleria will receive a free page on the salon's search engine-optimized website.
"It's more than just a profile page with a picture and contact information," says the owner of the salon. "It's a personal salon blog they can use to connect with their client bases. Every blog posting makes their page that much more optimized for Google, thus getting them that much more exposure on the ...
Didriks Announces British Cutlery Designer David Mellor Honored for Design Achievements by Modern Magazine
2011-01-08
In their Winter 2010 issue Modern Magazine spotlighted the late post-war British cutlery designer David Mellor. Mellor has been hailed "as Britain's most serious, modest and greatest postwar product designer."
Mellor not only devoted his professional life to the design of exceptional contemporary flatware but also created many well-known industrial designs woven in British daily life, such as public trash bins, street lights and the modernized red post box.
The full collection of David Mellor flatware is available for purchase in the United States at Didriks, in Cambridge, ...
Didriks Announces Third Annual February Campaign to Benefit Food For Free
2011-01-08
Didriks, a retailer of outdoor furniture and home furnishings, announced that they will donate five percent of in-store and online sales in February to Cambridge, MA nonprofit Food For Free. This will be Didriks' third annual campaign to benefit Food For Free, an organization that collects and provides fresh food to the needy.
Didriks invites the public to an in-store kickoff party on February 3rd, 2011, from 5-8pm. Catering for the event is provided by Season to Taste catering.
Food For Free Director, David Leslie, said: "We're excited and grateful to partner with ...
iWatchz Launches Carbon and Jelly Collections at CES 2011 -- The World's #1 iPod Nano Watch Follows the Huge Success of its 'Q Collection' with the Launch of Two New Stylish Collections
2011-01-08
The Carbon Collection features a matte-black aluminum nanoclipz system and a carbon watchband accented with coloured stitching available in six colours. The Carbon Collection will be available in early February 2011 at over 250 Apple Stores nationwide, Apple.com and www.iwatchz.com at $49.95 USD.
The Jelly Collection features a translucent-coloured nanoclipz system and matching vibrant silicon watchbands in pink, orange, red, green, blue, white and grey. The Jelly Collection will be available at retailers nationwide and at www.iwatchz.com in early February 2011 at the ...
IVF breakthrough to hit the world market
2011-01-07
A University of Adelaide reproductive biologist has achieved a major breakthrough in IVF technology that is expected to help millions of women around the world who have suffered previous miscarriages after IVF treatment.
Professor Sarah Robertson, an NHMRC Principal Research Fellow and member of the University's Robinson Institute, has partnered with a Danish company to develop a product which improves IVF embryo implantation rates for some women by up to 40%.
In the world's largest clinical trial on IVF media, Professor Robertson and ORIGIO a/s - a European company ...
Scripps Research chemist devises new method to quantify protein changes
2011-01-07
JUPITER, FL, January 5, 2011 – A scientist from the Florida campus of The Scripps Research Institute has devised a new method of analyzing and quantifying changes in proteins that result from a common chemical process. The new findings could provide new insights into the effects of a highly destructive form of stress on proteins in various disease models, particularly cancer.
The study, published January 5, 2011, in the online Early View of the journal Angewandte Chemie, was designated by the journal as a "very important paper," a distinction bestowed on less than five ...
Deaths from anesthesia during childbirth plummet
2011-01-07
AURORA, Colo. (Jan. 5, 2011) – The number of women who die from complications of anesthesia during childbirth has plummeted 59 percent over the last two decades thanks to improved monitoring and better medical techniques, according to a recent study.
The report's lead researcher, Joy Hawkins, MD, professor of anesthesiology and director of Obstetric Anesthesia at the University of Colorado School of Medicine, said the risks have been dramatically reduced due to a greater focus on eliminating complications of general anesthesia.
Hawkins examined 12 years of anesthesia-related ...
Ammonites' last meal: New light on past marine food chains
2011-01-07
Scientists have discovered direct evidence of the diet of one of the most important group of ammonites, distant relatives of squids, octopuses and cuttlefishes. The discovery may bring a new insight on why they became extinct 65.5 million years ago, at the end of the Cretaceous.
Ammonites are among the world's most well known fossils but until now, there has been no experimental evidence of their place in the food chain. Using synchrotron X-rays, a Franco-American team of scientists led by Isabelle Kruta has discovered exceptionally preserved mouth organs of ammonites, ...
Ammonites dined on plankton
2011-01-07
Powerful synchrotron scans of Baculites fossils found on American Museum of Natural History expeditions to the Great Plains suggests that the extinct group of marine invertebrates to which they belong, the ammonites, had jaws and teeth adapted for eating small prey floating in the water. One ammonite also provided direct evidence of a planktonic diet because it died with its last meal in its mouth—tiny larval snails and crustacean bits. The detailed description of internal structure of ammonites, published by a Franco-American research team this week in Science, also provides ...
Spinning the unspinnable: Using biscrolling technology invented at UT Dallas
2011-01-07
Nanotechnologists at The University of Texas at Dallas have invented a broadly deployable technology for producing weavable, knittable, sewable, and knottable yarns containing up to 95 weight percent of otherwise unspinnable guest powders and nanofibers. A minute amount of host carbon nanotube web, which can be lighter than air and stronger pound-per-pound than steel, confines guest particulates in the corridors of highly conducting scrolls without interfering with guest functionality for such applications as energy storage, energy conversion, and energy harvesting.
Using ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
College commuters: Link between students’ mental health, vehicle crashes
Using sugars from peas speeds up sour beer brewing
Stormwater pollution sucked up by specialized sponge
Value-added pancakes: WSU using science to improve nutrition of breakfast staple
Beyond the gut: A new frontier in IBS treatment by targeting the brain
New spin on quantum liquids: Quasi-1D dynamics in molecular spin systems
Spinal cord stimulation restores neural function, targets key feature of progressive neurodegenerative disease
Shut the nano gate! Electrical control of nanopore diameter
Cutting emissions in buildings and transport: Key strategies for 2050
How parents can protect children from mature and adult content
By studying neutron ‘starquakes’, scientists hope to transform their understanding of nuclear matter
Mouth bacteria may hold insight into your future brain function
Is cellular concrete a viable low-carbon alternative to traditional concrete for earthquake-resistant structures?
How does light affect citrus fruit coloration and the timing of peel and flesh ripening?
Male flies sharpened their eyesight to call the females' bluff
School bans alone not enough to tackle negative impacts of phone and social media use
Explaining science in court with comics
‘Living’ electrodes breathe new life into traditional silicon electronics
One in four chance per year that rocket junk will enter busy airspace
Later-onset menopause linked to healthier blood vessels, lower heart disease risk
New study reveals how RNA travels between cells to control genes across generations
Women health sector leaders good for a nation’s wealth, health, innovation, ethics
‘Good’ cholesterol may be linked to heightened glaucoma risk among over 55s
GLP-1 drug shows little benefit for people with Parkinson’s disease
Generally, things really do seem better in morning, large study suggests
Juicing may harm your health in just three days, new study finds
Forest landowner motivation to control invasive species depends on land use, study shows
Coal emissions cost India millions in crop damages
$10.8 million award funds USC-led clinical trial to improve hip fracture outcomes
University Hospitals Cleveland Medical Center among most reputable academic medical centers
[Press-News.org] House of Fraser Introduces New Tommy Hilfiger Collection OnlineHouse of Fraser has announced the availability of the new Tommy Hilfiger collection online at houseoffraser.co.uk.